Race is that huge elephant in the living room
that many white people swear no longer exists, yet they never take
their eyes off of it. So much of our nation's history has centered on
what to do about blacks and Native Americans, and lately Hispanics and
Asians, and this election was no different. Bush and Kerry rarely
mentioned race on the campaign trail, yet the loyal followers of each
understood perfectly how their policies would affect racial minorities.
Forget what you've been told the past few days about Bush and the
Republicans making any major inroads into the black and Hispanic vote.
Blacks and Latinos, even Asians, voted in greater numbers for the
Democrats than they ever have. And they did so because they feel deeply
threatened by the current Republican leadership. For the past few days,
the major media have claimed national exit polls show Bush saw an increase from 35% to 44% among Latinos. At least
when it comes to Hispanics, those exit polls were just as wrong as they
were with their overall analysis of the vote.
Latinos across the country voted nearly 68% to 31%
for Kerry, about the same percentage as Al Gore got against Bush in
2000, says Antonio Gonzalez, director of the Texas-based William C.
Velasquez Institute. The institute conducted its own exit polls both
nationally and in Florida.
According to Gonzalez, the polls used by the
national media are overly weighted to suburban voters, and since
Latinos are the most urbanized of any population group and mostly
concentrated in 14 states, the usual exit polls completely undercount
Latino voters in the cities.
And most important, the overall Latino turnout was
astounding. It jumped from 5.9 million voters in 2000 to nearly 8
million this year - an increase of 33%.
As for blacks, even if you assume the small
percentage increase in the Bush vote is accurate, and that remains to
be proven, the key trend to grasp is the enormous overall jump in the
black vote.
About 13.2 million blacks voted this year,
compared to only 10.5 million in 2000, according to the Committee for
the Study of the American Electorate. That's a jump of more than 25%.
What would you rather have if you were Kerry, 92% of 10.5 million
votes, which Gore got in 2000, or 88% of 13.2 million votes, which
Kerry may have received this year?
Meanwhile, Asians are estimated to have given Kerry 58% of the approximately 3 million votes they cast this year [more]